0912448540000 cell and molecular biology lecture 5

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Cell and Molecular Biology

Lecture 5

Eucaryotic cells contain protein fibers that are involved in- establishing cell shape- providing mechanical strength- cell movement- chromosome separation- intracellular transport of organelles

The cytoskeleton is a network of fibers that organizes structures and activities in the cell

• The cytoskeleton is a network of fibers extending throughout the cytoplasm

• It organizes the cell’s structures and activities, anchoring many organelles

• It is composed of three types of molecular structures:– Microtubules– Microfilaments– Intermediate filaments

Roles of the Cytoskeleton: Support, Motility, and Regulation

• The cytoskeleton helps to support the cell and maintain its shape

• It interacts with motor proteins to produce motility

• Inside the cell, vesicles can travel along “monorails” provided by the cytoskeleton

• Recent evidence suggests that the cytoskeleton may help regulate biochemical activities

Components of the Cytoskeleton

• Three main types of fibers make up the cytoskeleton:

– Microtubules are the thickest of the three components of the cytoskeleton

– Microfilaments, also called actin filaments, are the thinnest components

– Intermediate filaments are fibers with diameters in a middle range

10 µm

Column of tubulin dimers

Tubulin dimer

25 nm

Actin subunit

10 µm

7 nm

5 µm

Keratin proteinsFibrous subunit (keratinscoiled together)

8–12 nm

10 µm 10 µm 10 µm

Column of tubulin dimers

Tubulin dimer

Actin subunit

25 nm

7 nm

Keratin proteins

Fibrous subunit (keratins coiled together)

8–12 nm

Microtubules

• Microtubules are hollow rods about 25 nm in diameter and about 200 nm to 25 microns long

• Functions of microtubules:

– Shaping the cell

– Guiding movement of organelles

– Separating chromosomes during cell division

Microfilaments (Actin Filaments)

• Microfilaments are solid rods about 7 nm in diameter, built as a twisted double chain of actin subunits

• The structural role of microfilaments is to bear tension, resisting pulling forces within the cell

• They form a 3-D network called the cortex just inside the plasma membrane to help support the cell’s shape

• Bundles of microfilaments make up the core of microvilli of intestinal cells

• Microfilaments that function in cellular motility contain the protein myosin in addition to actin

• In muscle cells, thousands of actin filaments are arranged parallel to one another

• Thicker filaments composed of myosin interdigitate with the thinner actin fibers

Intermediate Filaments

• Intermediate filaments range in diameter from 8–12 nanometers, larger than microfilaments but smaller than microtubules

• They support cell shape and fix organelles in place

• Intermediate filaments are more permanent cytoskeleton fixtures than the other two classes

Protein fibers form the cytoskeleton and there are 3 typesof these protein filaments:- Actin filaments (also called microfilaments)- Intermediate filaments- Microtubules

In addition, a large number of accessory proteins, includingthe motor proteins, are required for the properties associatedwith each of these filaments

Each type of filament has distinct mechanical properties anddynamics, but certain fundamental principles are common toall.

The self-assembly and dynamic structure of cytoskeletal filaments

Main components of the eukaryotic cytoskeletonMicrofilaments: actin7nm

Microtubules: tubulins (, )25 nm

Intermediate filaments: lamin cell specific prot. (e.g. vimentin)8-12 nm

+ Associated proteins (e.g. motor proteins)

Cytoskeletal filaments are dynamic and adaptable

Stability of cytoskeletal filaments

Strong cytoskeletal filaments

Intermediate filaments- resistant to stretching forces

Structure of motor-proteinsmotor domain

motor domain

assoc.polypeptides

assoc.

polypeptides

assoc.

polypeptides

„stalk”

„stalk”

Kinesin Myozin Dynein

Motor proteins

+

-

dynein

+

kinesin

light chain

heavychain

Motor proteins: myosins

General structure: Globular head and fibrillar tail Heavy chains and light chains Head: motor domain with ATP-ase activity ADP- straight

Direction: + end motors

Myosin II molecule

Tissue level: muscle movement

Cellular level: determines shape of the cell motility of the cells cell adhesion mitosis, meiosis

Subcellular level: anchors organelles organization of organelles provides tensile strength movement of chromosomes organizing cell polarity Intracellular movement of vesicles

- Endocytosis – clathrin-mediated endocytosis and phagocytosis

Function of the cytoskeleton

DynamicAdaptable

Stable Strong

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